Sovrn Days fit Soa Without Food. On hrr lnnt voyage tlio Austrian Imrk Loiuidro, lionml from tlio West Indies to Uoston, saw Rnmrtliing floating on the wave tlmt lookod like a wreck. As the vessel camn nearer it was seen that tlio floating olneet was imrt of a raliin ol vessel, and that there wero two human beings niton it. A boat was sent to the wreck. Lashed to it were two nion, emaeiatod, with blackened, owollon lips and blistered faces and hands. They wore unable to speak, and one of them was insensible, lie did not retrain con sciousness till nine hours after he was taken aboard the Leandro. He was It, MacDonald, first mate of the bark Connty of Richmond, and his com panion was Henry Lang. The oast aways were eared for on the Austrian bark and taken to Boston. They were the only survivors of the County of Jvichmond, which went to pieces during a violent hurricane. In a letter to his brother, describing the disaster of the Iwrk and his subsequent sufferings, Mate MacDonald says : At seven o'clock in the morning the vessel took a heavy lurch to leeward, and the cargo shifted so much as to throw the vessel almost on her beam tends. All hands were then ordered to get the boat out. We got her down off the fore house and partly over to lee ward when the ship took a heavy sea on board, which filled the boat and com pletely tore her in pieces. Then it was every man for himself, for it was evident that the vessel could not float much longer. We had nothing to make a iaft of, as everything movablo had been washed from the docks. I got a ladder which had been on the forward house and lashed to it two boards which I got from the forecastle. Then, with the as sistance of one man, I got it over the xroather side, ready, as soon as the ves sel Bhowed signs of going down, to drop into the water. I had not long to wait, . for in about ten minutes she heeled over to leeward and commenced to settle. I then lot go the ladder and jumped after it, and succeeded after a kard struggle in reaching it. When I looked back the vessel had disappeared, having gone down stern first. All I saw were four men struggling with the waves on bits of wreckage, like myself. One man, Henry Lang, swam toward me and got on the ladder, which kept us above the water pretty well. In that position we ! remained a few minutes, when we saw something large floating to windward.1 We both let go the ladder and succeeded in getting to it, and found it to be the top part of the forward house, with the beams and all attached, which had been washed off as the vessel foundered. We got on top of the house, lashed our selves to it by means of bits of rope which we carried around our bodies, and then floated away from where the vessel went down. We saw the steward lashed, face upward, to something. He shouted to us, but we could render him no assistance. We were seven clays in that position, exposed to the burning sun by day and cold winds by night, without either food or drink, until we were picked up by the Austrian bark Leandro, by whose captain we were very kindly treated and taken to Boston. Wax Industry in China. Talking of bees makes one think of wax. The white wax industry of Sze chuen, China, however, does not depend on bees. It is a peculiar and growing industry. Baron ltichthofen estimates the value of the annual crop, on the average, at about 83,230,000. In 1879 upward of 8405,000 worth of this curious entomological secretion was exported from the one port of Hankow alone. White wax is the mero exudation of an insect in a 6tate of disease, ' aggravated probably by the operation of an uncon genial climate, and favored by the Eresence of a tree for which the creature as an affinity. In the Keenchang dis trict an evergreen, known as the Ligus trum lucidum, thrives in abundance, and on its twigs, in the spring of the year, countless flies 6warm like a brown film. The branches soon become covered with a white, soapy incrustation that in creases in volume until the commence ment of the fall of the year, when the sprays are cut off and immersed in water which is kept boiling. The viscid sub stance rises to the surface, and is skim med off, melted, and allowed to cool in deep pans. It was accidentally dis covered that, by transporting the insects from their native district to the more vigorous one of Keating Fu. in the north of the province, their capability of dis charging wax was largely augmented a property which was promptly and ex tensively availed of by the Sze-chuen traders. The period between evening and mornjng is chosen for conveyance, because many hours of sunlight would precipitate the hatching. This should take place onlyafter the females have been attached to the trees. Arrived at their destination, six or more of the mothers which are enormously prolific are tied, wrapped in a palm leaf, to a member of the ligustrum. A few days later the younpr flies are swarming on the twigs, where they fulfill their mission by the month of August. Then they perish in the cauldrons, where the results of their brief existence are collected. It is said that this peculiar industry re quires the exercise of great care, fore thought and experience. The Farmer (England). Dumas has written a book on woman which is just now much read and talked about in l'aris. Fifteen editions of it were exhausted the first day it appeared. As few know more about the subject (woman) than the author, what he says is very apt to be both truthful and entertaining. He asserts that "love, stripped of the social necessities by which it is surrounded, and reduced to its value as mere sentiment, cuts a very poor figure." The man who is asked to guess at a lady's age and doesn't guess several years less than he believes to be exact, is making an enemy and doing truth no good. Free lYess. Electricity is now used to light the Mount Vesuvius railway, some of tho la mps being so arranged as to illuminate th e sides and crater of the volcano, The effect is said to be magnificent. An Alaska Yosomlte. John Mnir, writing from Alaska to the " Ran Francisco Bulletin," says of one of the regions which he has visited near Sum Dum bav : This is in form and origin a typical Yosemite valley, though as yet its floor is covered with ice and water ice above and beneath. How noble a mansion in which to spend a winter and a summer I It is about ten miles long, and from three-quarters of a mile to one mile wide. It contains ten largo falls and cascades, the finest one on the left side near the head. After ooming in an ad mirable rush over a granite brow where it is first seen at a height of 900 or 1,000 feet, it leaps a sheer precipice of about 250 feet, then divides and reaches tho tide-water in broken rapids over boulders. Another about 1,000 feet high drops at once on to the margin of the glacier two miles back from the snout. Several of the others are upward of 3,000 feet high, descending through narrow gorges as richly feathered with ferns as anv channel that water ever flowed in, though tremendously abrupt and deep. A grander array of rocks and waterfalls I have never yet beheld. The amount of timber on the walls is about the same as that on the Yosemite walls, but owing to greater moisture there is more small vegetation busheR, mosses, grasses, etc.; though by far the greater portion of the area of the wall surface is bare, and shining with the polish it received when occupied by the glacier that formed the entire canon. The deep green patches seen on the mountains back of the walls at the limit of vegetation are grass, where the wild goats, or chamois rather, roam and feed. The still greener and more luxuriant patches further down in gullies and slopes where the declivity is not exces sive, are made up mostly of willows, birch and huckleberry bushes, with a varving amount of pricklv ribs, and rubus, and echinopanax. This growth when approached, especially on the lower slopes near tho level of the sea at the jaws of tho great side canons, is found to be the most impenetrable and tedious and toilsome combination of fighting bushes that the weary explorer ever fell into, incomparably more pun ishing than the buckthorn and manzan ita tangles of the Sierra. The cliff gardens of this Yosemite are exceedingly rich and beautiful. On almost every rift and beach, however small, as weil as on the wide table rocks where a little soil had lodged, we find companies of fine bright flowers, always fresh, and also far more brilliantly colored than would be looked for in bo cool and beclouded a region larkspurs, geraniums, painted-cups, blue-bells, gentians, sedums, saxifraxes, cpilobiums, violets, parnassia, veratruni, orchids, fntilaria, smilax, sinranthes asters, daisies, the yellow pond lily, bryanthus, cassiope, linnea and a great variety of flowering ribes and rubus and heath worts. Many of the above, though with soft bush stems and leaves, are yet as brightly painted as those of the warm sunlands of the South. The heath worts in particular are very abundant and beautiful, both in flower and fruit, making delicate green carpets for the rocks, flushed with pink bells, or dotted with red and blue berries. The grasses are everywhere tall, with ribbon leaves well tempered and arched, and with no lack of bristly spikes, and nodding purple panicles. The Alpine grasses of the Sierra, making close carpets on the glacier meadows, I have not yet seen in Alaska. Landscapes Changed by Animals. All animals, says Professor Mivart in the "Contemporary Review," are di rectly or indirectly supported by plants, and the range of plants and the very ex istence ot species are often wonderfully affected by the appearance on the scene of even one new kind of animal. Thus a great grazing district at the Cape, called the " Midlands," was, in Bur chell's time, covered with luxuriant greensward, with a few trees and bushes, with willows and acacias along the sides of its streams. The introduction of sheep first destroyed the grass and then most of the shrubs a change which affected the rainfall, so that this region has been invaded by tho hardy plants of the adjacent Karroo desert, and is fast becoming an extension of the desert it self. Saint Helena, when discovered by the Portuguese, in the year 1502, was entirely covered with forests (the trees drooping over its high precipices over hanging the sea) and with a rich flora of absolutely peculiar pants. In 1513 some goats were introduced, and in fifty years had multiplied into thousands. Yet in 1709 trees still abounded, and the pe culiar native ebony tree was still so abundant that it was used to burn lim with. In another hundred years (1810), the goats had entirely destroyed the great forests, yet so rich was the soil that it was hoped, with the destruction of the goats (and they were destroyed) the island would regain its wood by a quarter of a century. But this was not to be, for the government of that day most unhappily planted tho island with trees and shrubs from other countries, which have so grown and spread that now the old indigenous flora is almost confined to a few patches on the central ridge of the island, at a height o 2,700 feet. What has been lost may be judged by the fact that of the forty-five kinds of flowering plants and twenty-three spe cies of ferns which yet survive, no less than forty of the former and thirteen of the latter are absolutely peculiar to the island. Broken-Bone Fever. Dengue, or broken-bone fever, also known as "dandy fever, "bucket fever, and "bouquet fever" is said to have made its first appearance as a malady in the West Indies in 1827, at which time it was also communicated to the Southern portion of the United States. The disease, as has been previously been stated, received the name "dengue from the Spaniards of the West India islands from their word dengue, denot ing prudery, which expresses stiffness a pain in the bones and stiffness of the body, being the principal features ol the bickomng disease. During the past few months reports have como from every quarter in the Southern States regarding tho pre valence of this troublesome, but not neccessarily fatal disease. But few, if any, deaths have been made fcnown from its effects. Nearly every citizen of Savannah had a touch some light.somo severe of tho malady, and not one of them can give a definite explanation of the tortures of the disease. It has spared no one adults, children, little men, largo men, black men, white men, colored men, business men," sporting men, printers, editors, lawyers, judges, every one being subject to its fond em brace. As for a cure or a preventive for tho little nuisance, we aro not prepared to say what is good or what is not good in either case, but leave tho matter to tho physicians, who, by tho way, have been reaping a rich harvest from the unlucky victims of the disease. Some persons have gone so far as to say that the fever is more violent on those who have defied it before falling into its dutches, but for this we cannot vouch. We can say, however, that any one, sooner or later, who are among its victims, does not wish a second battlo in order to show better fight. JProbably for the above reason, more than anything else, that is its severity on those who defy it, we do not wish to agitate Mr. Fever, as our ranks have already been visited by tho merciless monster, and to his majesty we say "farewell." Savannah News. The Women of Montenegro. A correspondent of ho " London Standard" says: The Montenegrin woman takes an equal share of labor with the man at field work, and she does all the carrying. In travel here one en gages a horse to ride and a woman for the baggago. Only thowo who havo neither wife, mother, daughter, nor de pendent female relation shoulder bur dens as a common thing. Transport by animals also is a department of female occupation. Coming from Cettinjo here, one meets pack-horses, mules, donkeys, going up in droves, with a gang of women following. Tremendous weights they carry, slung by straps that cross tho upper chest, and as they go they knit or spin. These dwellers by the" frontier aro much better looking than the un mixed race of the interior, but not less hardy, strong and independent. They have no shame or hesitation in begging, and universal mendicancy on tho part of women and girls must, I imagine, have its influence on morality. In leaving Montenegro, the traveler carries with him a deep regard and admiration for the gallantry, the manliness and the shrewd intelligence of this stranga peo ple. Ho is constrained to wish them well and to hope that they will acquire means to live at peace hereafter. Heating Cars by Chemicals, The new plan devised by a French engineer for heating railway oars ap peal's to give satisfactory results so far. It consists simply in the use for the foot-warmers of acetate of soda, a sub stance which has considerable latent heat, and, dissolving at a certain teni- Eerature, absorbs a large quantity of eat, which becomes sensible during crystallization in cooling. All that is required is to fill the ordinary cases with a sufficient amount of the acetate, close them, and place them in a stove at about 100 degrees. The cooling of a case thus charged and heated takes from twelve to fifteen hours. Two warmers are thereafter taken from the compart ments and placed in a stove, where the crystals of soda acetate are re-dissolved, and they are then ready for fresh use. The advantages claimed for this system are: No necessity of changing warmers every two or three hours, or of maintain ing numerous employees to attend to them, also economy t in cost of heating, etc. Extremes meet. The man with corns on his feet will quite likely show a wry face. Mt. Clemens (M oh.) True Reoord. W. T. Lee, Eiq., of this paper, eaj s: Being convinced of the efficacy of Sc. Jacobs Oil in curing rheumatism, I have no hesitancy in recommending it. It takes 800,000,000 worth of bacon to supply England yearly. Tb Cnicago Ulmet says; Warner's Sate Kidney and Liver Cure is highly indorsed by ministers, judges, physicians, surgeons, by men ot lit rary and scholarly distinction, and by iiidividuala in all the walks ol lilo. There are 3,752 manufactories in Chi cago, giving employment to 113,507 operatives, and representing a capital of over 880,000,000. The value of the out put annually is 821!),000,0(K); value of material used, 8178,000,000; wages paid, 837,000,000. It is not easy to find white horses in Arabia, although searches for such ani mals are sometimes made for Europeans who fancy the color for the fashion. There is no necessity to neglect your busi ness it you ill only use l)r bull's Cough Syrup at onou; the most reliable remedy ia the world lor Coughs, ColiU, fcto. Guatemala, Central America, is to have an industrial exhibition in 1882. Theodore Tilton i back t'om Europe. His new lecture ia entitled " The World's To Moirow." He ia under the management iA Mr. Charles MuuiIopI, lateol Cooper lutUluie, now ot Kod LSuuk, N. J. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., Will Huiid their Uleotro-Volut o iielts 10 the HlBicled upon 30 days' trial. See their adver tisement in this paper headed, " On 30 Days' trial." Get Lyon's Tatent Hael Stiffeners applied to those new boot bolor you run them over. . " ""' ' ' mTl.m"'mm,mkl " "'" " mm mam Jaw.- sa w I II l1 ,i i.li.l'.n,, i"i.mp,iliin imiiH. s ,in .I, I,,,,,., ... Wauwiu Central Wisconsin. Beins asked concerning the oil, Mr. Aug. Kickousoh inlormed the questioner that St. Jacobs oil hud proved an excel lent and most useful remedy In every family that had used it. A large rna- tority of cases pronounced incurablo tave been entirely cured. Parisians delight in monstrosities of various kinds, and have been crowding round one of Cuevel's windows in the Palais Royal to Bee an enormous mush room, which grew in a wood at Ver sailles, and wa. brought to Paris with the utmost care as a positive phenome non. It Is more than a yard in circum ference, and the weight is sotne'hing over twcntyWour rounds. Inrrim Blood. In morbid condition-, ol the blood am many diseases; snub, as (alt rheum, ringworm, boils, o.rbnroles, sores ulcers nnd pimple. Iu this condition ol th blood try the Vkoktine, and oure these afl'eo tions. As a blood purifier it has no equal. Its effect are wonderlul. Malarial lovers can be prevented, also other miHSinalio disease, by occasionally using Dr. Savford'l Liver Invigorator, the oldest general Family Medicine, which is rooon. mended as a oure for all diseases caused by a disordered liver. Eighty-page book Kent Iroe. Address Dr. Snnlcvd 162 Broadway, N. Y. "Truth is mighty and will prevail." Phy sicians and DruggiRtn acknowledge the decid edly beneficial result derived from the use ol Ely's Cream Halm, tor the euro ot Catarrh, Hay Fever and Catarrhal Dealness. Price 50 cents. Wilkes-Baruk, Pa., Jan. 23, 1880. Messrs. Elt Bkos., Druggists, Oweeo, N. Y. The supply til Cream Balm I pur ohawd ol you sold lapidly. Such is tho de mand, I have had occasion to duplicate the orders no leas than five times within the past three months. My customers have found this is no humbug, but a preparation ot real merit, and evidently a sovereign catholioon lor tho oure of so distressing a disease as Catarrh. An article that will produce such aatinlactory roiu Its will prove a blessing to any com munity. Yours truly, Wm. Tuck. Druggist. (iltKAT IlOItSK MEDICINE. PR. TOll I AS VENKT1AN HORSR I.IXIMKNT li pint hottlin at OO cents: 32 ynars est ib lKhcd. tt I tit ni'SI In the world for the cu e of Colic, Olil S,,rc. Snnimn FtrulwM. Sore ThroaW, etc. TOBIAS- () ,,lilTION PuWDIiHS are warranted to cure Distemper, KrVel Worms, It tft; give a due coat; lncre.'fte the appetite and c'ciuis' the uriiiitr orpin, (,'er tilled to liy (VI. I). McD.tutel, owner of gome of the farttest runnlnx hormi In the world, and l.iMi oilier. Uft centa. Sold by drug, glata. Depot IJ Murrny Street, New York. NATURES RLMEDY. IThc ttn Bipod Puhihcb "WILL CURE Scrofula, Scrofulous Humor, Cancer, Canoerons Humor, Erynipelaa, Canker, gait Rheum, Plmplea or liunior In tba Fatv, Cough and Cokl. Ulcer. Bmncbttls, Neu raliila, Dyrpepala, Rheumatism, 1'alna in toe Hide, Constipa tion, Coatlvenesa, PI lea, Dlzzlneas, Headache, Nervonsucra, Pain in the Back, Falntneu at the Htomach, Kidney Complaint, Femalo Wenkuces and General Debility. Till preparation I sclentlfloally and chemically combined, and so strongly couoentrated from roots, herbs aud barka, that its good rffeota are realized immediately after commencing to take it. There is no diaeaae of the human tystera for which tbs Vxoetine caunot be uaed with riancT afktt, as tt does not contain any metallio com pound. For eradicating th system of all Impuri ties of the blood it haa no equal. It has never failed to effect cure, giving too and strength to th njetem debilitated byUiaeaao. Its wonderful effects upon the complaints named are surprising to all. Many have been cured by the Vsoetihs that have tried many other remedies. It can well be called THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. Dr, Oallier Surprised, Vegetine Cured His Daughter. Calliebsville, Chilton Co., Ala.,) May 1ft, 1878. f Dear Sir My daughter has I wen afflicted with naeal catarrh, ufTecilou of bladder sod kidneys, aud Is of scrofulous dlntheais, aud, after having exhausted uiy skill and the mont eminent physi cians of Se'.inn, I t last resorted to the use of your Vkoetine (without confidence), and, to my great urprtae, my daughter has been restored to health. I write this as a a.mplo act of Justice, sua not an advertising medium. lteaurctfuUy,. T. K. CALLIER, M. D. Vecetinc is So'd by all D ugg'sts. Yhs Crrat Romed I-at THE LIVkR. THE BOWELS, nnd the KIDNEYS Thcflo great ori-ana are the Natural cleanaersof thesj'stem. If tiny woik well, Lcnllh will be per fect, if they become elcib'L.'vd, dreadful difcoam s are develoed because tJio ulood la poiponed with tho humoin tliatst'onld Imve licen expelled naturally. KIPNFI Y-W O R 1 w-i 11 restore the natural act Ion, ami throw oil the. diaee. Thousand huve been cured, andallmcy bo. t'oraalo l-yoll Dmnrita. NCYCLOPEDIA OX TIQUETTEsBUSINESS Thl I the cheapest n1 only complete and reliant woi a on Kllquelle and llusiuena and Social Foriiin. It, teilH how to periorni all the various duties nf lite, aud. how to apnea- to the he.nl advunUKe on all ocvutlous. 1 Agents Wonted. Send to' cl culars conl duli g i fu I le.npt on of t.m wo,k and I'll lernis lo -i-ell. I Address National Ffimiiso Co., Phllaie Iphiu, Pa. 1 Acents Wanted eve-ywh tune,, lof.iinihcfc, hoteisaiid I lare c,iiutii. in: hrxest 111 the eoiuil 1 ; iiuai ly and lermi inchest. Coun try storekeeper hoo denllnr write J 1 1 K WELLS TKA UuJul'AMY, au I Fu ton St., N Y. 1. O. Iin ivo. MPL0YMENT-l-55Aw1iSi,"J! Al.o SALARY peraaonth, AU EXPENSES dvaucrd. W AGES promptly paid. SLOAN dc Co. ao Uteri (laclunatl. J. TRUTH l&MJaUXi Dit nast will nx Bi.ji4irts,ii yustt , fctat. nlnf J swvl lata af hauf, mmI urvt ( f Tr fusra - bava4 n(. Iniiiaiaef mm,iibMi1 Wt anil Aral svswt. kmA dtsisf aar- aana)..a.a1 , IsaM a IKKXCII riKNTIST'9. Kstnlllshed 1H40. Artiflcia teeth from up. Was administered, Soc. (iold H.hiia up. Cieatiinu, &01:. up. All ihe latest luiproveincnta ii detilijdi'y ueiit y executed. Charges moderate. Work warranted, DuriuNAC Mho., Ifttt Bowery, New York. jexwLHiuaiavnE wniariii . fel lw JT lt-1.1. T!....., ...I, ....,... il. !,-' f.U.. . &?,. fW.iyLX,,...,i..,. iiiT .!; S350 A MONTH I AGKN'TS WANTKDl, 7 AS Heat Helling Articles loth world, samplerse. Jat bauxtuN, Uetrolt, Mich. 777 A YEAR and expenses to agents. tlutllt Kree. Addiesa V. u. VIUKKRY, Ausu.n, Maine. S20Q0-: IN liObtl Oivea Away. Send Vet. amp for particulira. Address Jus csuEMiEg, uewisi'UrgQ, t'nion t.o.,ra. A 1,1. Pri sons wafitlhg Employment In Mercantile Houses, Hotels, Mores. ( uilces. etc., and Teacners denhhu s hool eim ieiueiiUi. oil , or a'ldre-s with it imp, MANHATr N AtiKNCY. 7itd Uroadwuy, N. Y. City. AI.iMCN'! Itrnln Kooil cures Nervous Debility , Weakness of WenerHtive ornsns, ill all diUKplsta, bend for (Jlr'l'r to Alleu's f liarmacy, 31 it Fir at Ave., N Y. IAWKRC. ll a day at home easily made. Coilly Ooull fie. Addis a Taua a Co., August. Menr Of? CFWT HIU and new Catalogue for I O cti it 1.VIII.V NoVKl-TY CO., Kuthuid, Vt. p 1 s ojS'CUR e fr ro::"","p',:,ne t) r t''K cotes ail your us Jii'l Hunlofcia, ,tt Address Cmmk Huss, M. P., Wnmtiieiuu, Uei. 40 PAliE HOOK OK WONDERS for a S-nt almp Audieto It. Kill A CO.,al Canal St., New York. (R t ft $?fi iW day t bom. Samples wortt Kb) r -r , Atluisa r ia 4 1'xvaad. 1m. IF: 1 GREAT GER1&! I 1- i. " - REMEDY FOH RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, , LUMBAGO. BACKACHE, GrOTJT, SORENESS or tas CHEST, j'V j ""h"i'"h"l""ll ' j , r i! 1t"J",f"li'i',n li j!wtnm!THm,iiiiimirj MIunuuauMilil.lu.rililllf V iii-iiiiiil'jjinifllwlii; iiiiiiyt mutt ! HpimdinntiiRmji SORE THROAT, ltI!:miH:i QUINSY, SWELLINGS AND SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET AB EARS, ISO General Bodilj Pains, TOOTH, EAR ASD HEADACHE, ALL OTBEB PAIRS , ASO ACHES. I iMlin;it,m,!t,iiiill !; '! Qi;:il:!i.!!i!i!!!;i) jjlji ijlillniiiNiiiui!!'.;!! 11. . No rrayaratloa on aarth aipials 9r. Jil'nas Oil as a Ar anna, siuplb and csr.sp Kxlsrnal Itemed v. A trial entaiU but tha oumparaliTslr trlflmfjoutlsr nf .VH.Krvand ry eaa fu (Taring with aiucan tiaveulioap and Ksilira proof of iUolaima. Dima-nnag M H.iTI.1 LANUl'iOU. SOLO OT ALL ORUQOnTS ADO DEALERS IN MEOICIK. A. VOGELER & CO. llalthnnrr. Mr!.. P. H. A. N Y N I' t FRAZER AXLE GREASE. FMl IT.F. JY Al l. 1KAT.I'.IN, Awarded the ilEDA I. (if 110SUR at the On.nmni and 'tin f'i"tn. Chicago. FRAZER LUBRICATOR CO. New York. GELLULOID f EYE-CLASSES. rtprtsenttnn the choicest selected Tortolse-Shell so4 Amber. The lightest, Wilsoniest, and strongest known. Sola by Opticians a-d Jewelers. Mad by SPF.NCI1 O. Jl CO., I t Sl.ildrn Lane, N'ew Vork. Is the ' Orlijlnal " Conre ntratdl I ye and IlcllaWe Family Boitp Maker. Ulie, lions accnitiiuy each fan for nmklng lli, s. ft mi l I'dlli t noap quickly. It la full wr-luhl and stn n- ill. your grocer for fciAl'ONla I I I It, an. I tike no uthcir. PENN'A SALT MANlirACTURINQ CO., PhiU. II1I1 ClsUm!louse Ktabllheit 1805. 1W lMr Thousanilaof aoldlcraand heirs entitled. P iiMin.a onte bnck 10 ilm li iro or ili uili. I'ltne limtfnt, AildiehS, with aiamp, 4.1 otttiU K. I F.MOV, P. O. Drawe- it A . AVa.liliitftou, D. Ct SORE EARS, CATARRH. Many p-opte are afflicted with lbei " 1 inn) 'dlaeaaes, but very few ever gut well from : m; i,,isUnwint( to ImproiHT treauneui only, as l.,. ae n aiii cuialielf piopellr treated. Tin. Is 11 Idle I. oast bul .1 ,a. t I bav proven aver and over anain liy.iny treatinenl Send for QjV Utile li 'iik, free to alt. it w.li tvll you all .ib. 'lit tlieas matters mid who 1 sin. al v iuiko llook, 319 pint', octavo, price 4 by mail. Addreak 1U. i). K. HUOfc).W AHElt, Aur.il inrncnn, Hemllita, fa. OR 30 DAYS' TRIAL. We will sen.', our Klectro-Voltale Belts and other Klt trie Aiipilaiieeaupou trial for .10 dayalo Une afflicted iih Arrvviu IMiittii) and iIumim' a pertunat nulure. Am ot the l.iver, k I'lri. ys. Klieuuiatiaiu, Piralyaia, etc A ewe curt iwtrurui eti or no ray. Ai lilreaa Voltai Ic He 1 1 Co., Marshall, Mich. A GREAT OFFER!! Sr&yvr&VS: 9 .0, iii. iiri iiiiieiil (1 irarn, Srcond llnnil fNiTKfli:NTS 111 l!AIU;AINS. A4iKT.'4 VATI'I. llliiairiiM-K'ATAI.t; K Free). lIOltACK WATKKb ilk; lO.,b'U li'wuy, N.V. CfiR A WKKK In your own town. Tsrmaaiu soimtnt uu free. Address U Haixstt 4 Co- PorUaud, Mams. Gteat Money Saver ! "ii!:!;!i illiwilK ,,l ttiuuuiimiuuiitiiiiitnuijj! 'mmm lliPlli,,,, ...riinili'lmmiimnlll! & (' sfsiy rsitno oa THAT IS JUST 1 I tsoui.00511 1 What 1 shall I rAitnsMU ooAFtis. this J-vJ GREASE. mil XWHHiPPINESSk5CV SAPONIFIER PENSIONS. Many do a profitable JubblnK business for neighbor, bealde their own work. Many boys do all their father's Prliitmir, beside alien img echool, and they enjoy ths fun aud ai kept at bom out ol ulachlef. A. auleudiil I'lociit furany Iloy, Sent Everywhere n Warrantel In Every Respect cr Money Returned. Everything Is simp'e and strong and lasts life time. AViways ready. What convenience for turning ofl this thing and Uiai ul a moment a noUce I PlttnK .Sk0 Kr Prf,VC?,?Ut:wh,V VTU.U 4 by TJ Inches (on any sis - " -- , . Kmit by P. O. Order, Draft or Kegistered Letter. Or at unco. Kamewber we warrant every article and gu.rent UO by s'oipiy lo. lowing our oriuted lu.uucUona I ar Or vmmi ujie, uuwi 01 uia jaanuiaciAjry, OatsJaga 6X Pisaaca, , by U lot l 70,000 SOLD YEARLY. The growing ,.pnlirltr and naefnlnae of CAIttMKT or I'AHI.on OIHUN I shown by the fact that stHVKMTT THOI S)Amiare oltl early In h tiatltetl ats. Th heat are th UASOII & HAIILIII RCAH3S which havs been swarded Biaaiut bihtisctioms ro flKMOKSfHATSD SUKBIORITT t TST OKI Of til GilEAT WOKI J)'8 Industrial Kxlilbltloo for thirteen years, n.' siat sat 1 ntrfe Kcaytlon. NEW 8TYL.ES Are ready this season with Important Improvement FOR I.AKUK CHt HOI1KS, splendid organs, with fTo power and variety, at tMO. wo, S-IW, snd leas prlrei-i F()RSMAI.U:ilCllUHUIIK8,8(;il001.8,e.,S'itot.''0 and upward. BI PKKU DRAWINO KOOM 5 at t to (.110,'snit Opwnrd. A OHKAT VAR1RTT ol B.MAI.l.KH OltOANS of eqniil exllrnc. thouiih If capacity, or In plain cases, at SM to JO and tipwar l Also fiirnlslied" ro mokthltot niRTiu,T f irainTi, t and upward. TV orvnrt eirr errtaMi unrlmM In twflsnre. vhlrthr frxYi art uot much hiihtr Hum thoie of ftr tttet uir tmtrit tnft hefoTs purchnnliiit any Oa'sn send for Infeaf II.I.i 'S TK.Vi'KI) CAlAl.lMil'H l. Ip. o.), consilium fn.l ui'Ki'il,lli,n uii'l prli'ia. IncmdliK new styles, snd mni-h u ful lulu nution fur the purchaser of any orxnn, wbi n w II he s nt Irt nd ;uWrm.l MAHt.V k II A M t.l -V (lltfiAS 'IO,,l,'i l iienii'ht ir.. i KosTdhi, 44 Kt 1 Itli Str.et, hW tUKKi 11H WaUiaU Avenue, CIIK'AiiO. . PiffJJjli ' 1 RED RIVER VALLEi 2,000,000 Acrco Wheat Landi kat la th WorU. for sal by th St. Panl, Minneapolis iMaiiitoliaH.BJ Tra dollar par aor alkwd th settler fa k am ad oultUaUoa. For paeliowlara apsJy to D. A. MoKINLAY, IjhiH rrtimtlner. t. !. is B. Tf. TATNE & SONS, CORNING, IK." KM-. I11.I.1I.D IS4- Tntont Sprtrk-Arrostlti" glncH.iniiiinto' nnd otu: Vcrlicul KtiKlneB with l)illci'. tui'i'kn Hnft'ty 1 eisw ltli hcctlonul boil, rau't be eiploilcrl. wiin Atiiaiiiniin cut ll'i 01119 1 6U K''i,C0u Bi'nil for Olvciilnr. . wliuru you saw this. JSTEY & C2 Br attlf n n p o will ixiMltlvtrly cure IVniulrf v eakne,a,t'i ; lng of (he Womb, Whiles, ('hroino lnituin lUceriillonot tho Woinh, Inclileiitul li.-n" Flooding, I'alnful, Sniipn-ssr, snd lcrt'tn, truuuon, o. An old mid lelialilo ronieily. .' Uil c:ird for a pamphlet, v.l'li tionimcnl. ci ortl!toaUa f roin puyalii.'.jM und ituilfius, r arth A Ivillanl, Utlcu. K.Y. let C alt iJr j. l Ml im r Uittlo. DAMEL, F. BEATTY'S ORGANS 14 STOPS, Sill IIASS & OCT. CO IT FOl'Il SET 10NLYS HoimIn PIANOS 1 Lisa u (teuton Trial Warranted. Catalogue Address DANIEL F. DKAT1Y. VVaahiniion Is Ihe beat In the World. It Is atrsnhitely pnre. It tt best for Medicinal PuiMnee. It Is llie beat for Haling all Family Uses. Sold by ail Diuuiata and Uroci. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phi PETROLEUM Grand Medal St Philadelphia poe'tluu. JELLY Sl.ver Mc-ili at Fkm FxpOlllIloir This wonds'ftil mliataniw Is scknnwledgcd by p' stclana tlm UKlmut the wor'd 10 le the he.t rctne Iv ' covered for the cur of Wounds, Hums Khcuinal'' Skin Diabase, Piles, Cat irrh. Oldlb alns, tc. In or., that every one may 17 It, It Is put un in IK and tl bottles for household u-e. (Ihtiiln it from your ill ukk -and you will Hud It superior toaujUilug you have ev umkL 1881. FREE. 1881. Tim 1LLUS TRAfED "GOLDEN PKIZF. ' lor 1881 i now i early. This ulergant book con tain ahrrnt 200 flue engraving. A etxwimea copy will be sent free to any one in the Uniteii Status, on receipt t a three-oent stump tr prepay portage on tbe bonk. AgnnU wanted. Address F. OLEFIN A CO., 46 Summer Street, Bonton. Ma-. Tit ovVTT T?OTTrtli-itinn 3p 7 SJTC saeh, fonnerly Jl (10 to $1 25 each; Vy t I tD I O I jMn,uuiii' Lite of Ftcterick the (i mil. II. C'.irlyle'a l.ile ot HnlK-n Hun, a. III. La lliartin'al.lfeof M.n yileen of Set. IV. 1 In,'. llU-'lle, Miinltiiess fj! PCMTH fl1'-'11' foriiier.y $.M of l hrlot. VCIl I O, in In I. Amu d's 1-iKht nt A-: II. li"! ismith's Vicar of Wukeneld. 111. tiaroa MnnchilllSi'li's Triive'a und Surprlslim Aiivcitturea For KIV a-. liuuynn'a I'lluiim's l'rou'n-M. Illustrated calal,.iiue aent free. A at V. It 1(7 AN l.tll IK. hXrll MK. John II. Alden, staniKer, Tilnune Bulluliiht. New Y01 k . Do Your Own Printing Premies and outfit from :l to 95M Over 2J.D at) .u Of Type. Catalogue and ieiluccl p ice li.t free. II. lOOVI U I'lillailelphia, Pa. VO U & G Twl E u zv:$uz mouili. Kvf rv rrti'tuttti puaianteeu n iu ttttu tlnn. A'iUr-HB H Va.cutlug, MuiiaK, Jrtu.-bVi i-, Wlv Qi" lX 1'olUhfd Hraiiit Alonuiiiriitii from bJ-t9 -. aV'ivu ou LkjuiU ftinp ttt iii p ii 1 1 1 A mer it.'. Ilia' ipi inns tict urtUe and ht-aulifdl. i'lttim mitl piin-i free. JU1I.N' W. l.KlitiK hru!,it..r, Aln-rdt eu, H4t oni. V4afeiiJ: Ilfllpp NATRONA w: Every lan 1 Printer A ama'- Trlntlng Press in yi.dr Offlc, your Stor. your Fsctory, yonr Study or your Houie, will do aU your own Printing of Cards, Labels, Billheads, nd even Catalogues. Type setting easy by printed Instructions sent with every Press. We havs sold hundred and all work them saw day received. It Is pastime for spar hours, and pays. Printing at 1-4 PRINTERS' PRICES! lyjie, iiuieatl,ilc, we send O. O. D. If i Is sent aa guarant.-e Ordera HI led that anybody, even boy ul uu. tan do beat of workal (re ratuo your louey.